Have students read Handout A: Andrew Jackson and Indian Removal and answer the questions.
Expand WarmupAsk students to brainstorm important American principles and values, and agree upon a short, simple definition for each. In addition to the ideas students generate, you may offer:
Honor: keeping one’s word
Respect: esteem for others
Majority rule versus minority rights: natural rights are not subject to majority vote
Property rights: being able to keep one’s possessions and the fruits of one’s labor
Popular sovereignty: government and laws based on the consent of the governed
Representation: laws are only legitimate if the people they affect have a say in them
Responsibility: taking care of oneself, one’s family, and one’s community
Equal treatment under law: no one is above the law
Separation of powers: powers are divided among branches of government
Expand Activities ActivitiesWrite the following quotation from the petition of the ladies of Steubenville, Ohio, on the board.
“To you [Congress], then, as the constitutional protectors of the Indians within our territory, and as the peculiar guardians of our national character, …. we solemnly and earnestly appeal to save this remnant of a much injured people … and to shelter the American character from lasting dishonor.”
Ask students: Why were the petitioners concerned about “lasting dishonor” to the American character?
Have students work in pairs to complete Handout B: America’s Constitutional Principles and Civic Values.
Reconvene the class and fill in the chart using a projection of Handout B.
Expand Wrap UpDistribute Handout C: Discussion Questions. As a large group, discuss the questions on the Handout.
Expand HomeworkHave students use one of the discussion questions from the lesson as a prompt and write a one-page response paper.
Expand Extensions ExtensionsHave students read the entire message from Jackson’s Second Message to Congress and write a one page response that might have been given by a member of Congress.
Have students write a one-page position paper arguing whether or not Indian Removal could have taken place after:
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Duration | 50 min |
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Grade Level | 9, 10, 11, 12 |
Period Era | 1810s, 1820s, 1830s, Jacksonian Era |
Topic | Communities, Executive Power, Native Americans, President, Westward Expansion |